Competently executed, and certainly not bad, but I'm afraid I just didn't get much out of it… the "notes explaining the thing in a roundabout way" narrative device pushed that high-wire act of a neutral vote into a downvote, if only because I want to encourage people to try other things.

Seconding this, although I'm neutral voting rather than downvoting. There are probably a lot more creative ways to convey the twist that you could come up with, and it's rather disappointing to see the whole trope of "creator of skip leaves vague note that leaves just enough for reader to get the full picture" yet again.

And if the whole world is crashing down… fall through space out of mind with me.

I like the addendum portion that the makers are making kaiju films via replication.

Cons:

We know what are 2954-1A and 2954-1B, but what is 2954-1 defined as? It's hard to attach myself to the article if there's a component not addressed here.

While I like the subject-matter, I feel it does not have the essence of kaiju as a genre. Kaiju film settings are usually cities, and kaiju represent a destructive force of Nature (or atomic power in Godzilla's case).

2954-1 is A and B together, when one or the other is not specifically addressed (i.e. SCP-X-2 is killed from SCP-X-1's attack)

As for the other point, I can understand where you're coming from. Personally I wasn't going for a grand Godzilla-esque film; it was more along the lines of an Ultraman/Ultra Q atmosphere, where the monsters are less unstoppable, havoc-causing beasts, and more simply strange/natural-yet-frightening animals.

The notes sold it for me. I was thinking "unending Godzilla" was cute, but not overly interesting, but the reason why it's happening (though it reminds me of another article I forget the nature of) is great.

I liked it then and I still like it. It's well-written, fun, and nostalgia-inducing. The idea that the film shooting (ha, ha) continues 40 years later because no-one thought to inform the providers that they were done (or the providers didn't get the message, or chose to ignore it…!) is highly amusing. +1

Eh… It's just good enough to escape the mediocrity pit which would induce me to downvote — but not good enough to upvote. This is certainly not bad, and I do like that it has charm, but I wish there was more to it.